Having managed a band a decade or so ago, I can tell you one thing for sure... the road can be a strange friggin' place. Lord knows I've seen more than my fair share of weird things, but they were nothing compared to what's on display in Rock & Roll F'n' Lovely.
Josh Bagnall directs the flick, which stars Joel Fry, Anton Saunders, Lee Whitlock, Michael Starke, Mick Whitnall, John Jenkins, Eddie Jenkins, and Pete Doherty. Super curious? You can watch the movie right now via iTunes.
Synopsis
A dark and fantastical touring tale with a little rock and roll on the side, this touring crew drama focuses on a mythical festival tour that becomes a rock and roll legend. With stunning cinematography and shocking behind-closed-doors scenes, this is not a film for the faint-hearted. A unique take on the festival scene, the film captures the essence of the festival spirit...
Josh Bagnall directs the flick, which stars Joel Fry, Anton Saunders, Lee Whitlock, Michael Starke, Mick Whitnall, John Jenkins, Eddie Jenkins, and Pete Doherty. Super curious? You can watch the movie right now via iTunes.
Synopsis
A dark and fantastical touring tale with a little rock and roll on the side, this touring crew drama focuses on a mythical festival tour that becomes a rock and roll legend. With stunning cinematography and shocking behind-closed-doors scenes, this is not a film for the faint-hearted. A unique take on the festival scene, the film captures the essence of the festival spirit...
- 5/6/2013
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Day two of the 2013 NFL Draft is in the books.
There were several big names that were still on the board once the draft kicked off its second day at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.
By the time the day was over, more of those names did in fact come off the board.
One in particular drastically changed the culture of a franchise, and may have sent Mark Sanchez looking for packing boxes.
The results from Day 2 are as follows:
Round 2
No. 33: Jacksonville Jaguars- Jonathan Cyprien, S, Florida International
No. 34: Tennessee Titans (from Kansas City Chiefs through San Francisco 49ers)-Justin Hunter, Wr, Tennessee
No. 35: Philadelphia Eagles- Zach Ertz, Te, Stanford
No. 36- Detroit Lions- Darius Slay, Cb, Mississippi State
No. 37: Cincinnati Bengals (from Oakland Raiders)- Giovani Bernard, Rb, North Carolina
No. 38: San Diego Chargers (from Arizona Cardinals)- Manti Te’o,...
There were several big names that were still on the board once the draft kicked off its second day at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.
By the time the day was over, more of those names did in fact come off the board.
One in particular drastically changed the culture of a franchise, and may have sent Mark Sanchez looking for packing boxes.
The results from Day 2 are as follows:
Round 2
No. 33: Jacksonville Jaguars- Jonathan Cyprien, S, Florida International
No. 34: Tennessee Titans (from Kansas City Chiefs through San Francisco 49ers)-Justin Hunter, Wr, Tennessee
No. 35: Philadelphia Eagles- Zach Ertz, Te, Stanford
No. 36- Detroit Lions- Darius Slay, Cb, Mississippi State
No. 37: Cincinnati Bengals (from Oakland Raiders)- Giovani Bernard, Rb, North Carolina
No. 38: San Diego Chargers (from Arizona Cardinals)- Manti Te’o,...
- 4/27/2013
- by Doug Rush
- Obsessed with Film
2012 NBA Draft Results
Yesterday marked the day of the 2012 NBA Draft and many things happened the way they were supposed to. Anthony Davis went first overall, David Stern was booed whenever he appeared and every pick after #1 was a crapshoot. Charlotte was the first to put speculation to rest by taking Michael Kidd-Gilchrist with the second pick over Bradley Beal, Thomas Robinson and other other hopefuls.
Surprises were plentiful and present throughout the draft as well. Some highlights include Andre Drummond falling all the way to Detroit at #9, the Toronto Raptors reaching for Terrence Ross at #8, Dion Waiters taken by Cleveland at #4 and Perry Jones falling all the way to the Oklahoma City Thunder at pick #28.
In general, teams tended to draft based on need rather than on talent. I would have to say that the Thunder more than likely may have taken the ‘steal’ of the draft in Perry Jones.
Yesterday marked the day of the 2012 NBA Draft and many things happened the way they were supposed to. Anthony Davis went first overall, David Stern was booed whenever he appeared and every pick after #1 was a crapshoot. Charlotte was the first to put speculation to rest by taking Michael Kidd-Gilchrist with the second pick over Bradley Beal, Thomas Robinson and other other hopefuls.
Surprises were plentiful and present throughout the draft as well. Some highlights include Andre Drummond falling all the way to Detroit at #9, the Toronto Raptors reaching for Terrence Ross at #8, Dion Waiters taken by Cleveland at #4 and Perry Jones falling all the way to the Oklahoma City Thunder at pick #28.
In general, teams tended to draft based on need rather than on talent. I would have to say that the Thunder more than likely may have taken the ‘steal’ of the draft in Perry Jones.
- 6/30/2012
- by John Tang
- We Got This Covered
It's Supreme Court sea son. Souter out; Rehn quist back to life. Until his 2005 death, after 33 years on the court, William Rehnquist waged a quiet, constant, successful battle for conservatism.
Only once, to the Times' John Jenkins, did he speak explicitly about his efforts. The 1985 Times Magazine cover story revealing his demagoguery brought him unwelcome attention, whereupon this most influential and least understood chief justice (for 19 years) of the modern court vowed never again to go public.
Now, more than two decades later, comes Jenkins' "Rehnquist: A Partisan Life." It probes his conservatism back to Milwaukee school days,...
Only once, to the Times' John Jenkins, did he speak explicitly about his efforts. The 1985 Times Magazine cover story revealing his demagoguery brought him unwelcome attention, whereupon this most influential and least understood chief justice (for 19 years) of the modern court vowed never again to go public.
Now, more than two decades later, comes Jenkins' "Rehnquist: A Partisan Life." It probes his conservatism back to Milwaukee school days,...
- 5/5/2009
- by By CINDY ADAMS
- NYPost.com
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